How many of us truly focus on the mental game of archery? For me, my shooting could improve exponentially by focusing more on visual imagery and the mental game of archery. Whether it's bow hunting or target archery, Trad or compound bows, the process is the same.Those among us who're consistently successful in hunting or target environments, what processes do you use?
I'm posting a video which shows mostly compound shooters, but there is one trad archer. I hope it doesn't get pulled for that reason. The process of archery, excluding the equipment used, is the same (mentally speaking). The physical aspects of executing the perfect shot may differ, but the process is the same. The process of perfecting the archers shot is the same when we trust the process we use to make the shot.
What do you do, mentally, to improve your archery journey? If you haven't begun a visual imagery process, will you try it? Maybe this is the biggest key to archery once we master the physical skills (form) of archery...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRJk-s_Qg-c
A good friend of mine in Idaho shoots competitive archery and is really big on the mental game. I asked him once how he calms his nerves during a shoot and he said, "By the time I step up to the line to shoot the very first round, I've already (mentally) shot every shot of the tournament, hit x's and won the tournament. So, when I have to do it in real life, I am just replaying what I have already done in my mind."
I almost fell asleep watching that....
I have my shot process taped to the back of my bow limb. Nobody else would probably understand it, but I know what each step means.
The hard part is remembering to take my eyes off the deer and looking at the bow limb.
I've experienced poor shot execution on whitetails when they're walking, such as a nice buck running a scrape line. When I stop the buck, which is a discussion in and of itself, I sometimes hurry the shot. If I would visualize letting down, should he begin walking, or executing the perfect shot, if he remains motionless, I think that would help me when I'm truly in the moment.
Good points Dennis. I think your video is more about the relaxation and focus - as in mindfulness meditation translating into more consistent shot sequence, something that everyone of us needs.
Years ago most of my daily practice sessions, particularly prior to a tournament, were in my recliner. I could close my eyes and visualize each step of my shot sequence over and over again. When I would finally get up to the line I would replay the whole sequence with my eyes closed - then open - aim and loose the shot.
In hunting situations I fall back on mantras that I have difficulty with - like, "back tension, back tension, back tension - release!" Or, lately, "pick a spot stupid" haha.
Hi Pete,
Exactly! Like zagaya and Arctic Hunter, you've been ahead of the curve on this one. I've always been aware of the process of visual imagery, but I didn't realized how powerful this process can be, nor how many really good shooters use this process, to improve their shooting.
I need to focus on the mantra...Pick a spot, dummy too! :biglaugh:
This is probably a better example of the process and less about relaxation and focus.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=msGXOI7yYXI
We have to remember that there is not just one way to shoot. There are many "styles" and each user of a "style" adds their little bit of unique to it.
Additionally, different styles can be used for different reasons. As just a point, one may require a stopped deer, while others can go with a (reasonable) moving target and not get flustered.
Practicing those aspects also helps, since having "done it" before and having already ironed out and perfected the style needed to excel helps you to do it correctly under the pressure of the moment.
Yup, there is a lot more to flinging arrows than just the flinging, and the mental game is a huge part of it.
ChuckC
Read Jay Kidwell.
Hey Dennis....
I spent one entire year changing my shooting style and working on the execution of a shot process. Mimicking some of the great traditional target shooters of today. I made sure every shot that I took a breath, pointed my shoulder and hit my two anchor points. I excelled in my target shooting that summer and would spend hours executing and shooting dots and tight groups. That hunting season I struggled all season. I shot several deer but my shot placement on the deer taken was just ok and I soon lost my confidence. I found myself putting more emphasis on the "shot process" than just shooting the darn deer.
The following year and still today, I've gotten away from the stringent shot process. I'm back to picking a spot, coming into my anchor and waiting to get still. When I'm still the arrow is gone. I spend considerably less time target practicing and more time hunting groundhogs and judo shooting in the yard. When I shoot in my basement up close I practice form, outside I focus only on my target and one arrow. I don't shoot for groups and I don't get too carried away with my accuracy expectations.
I can't help but remember what John Shulz said in his video years ago, "you have to pick whether you're going to be a target shooter or a hunter because the two just don't go together". (The last minute of Hitting them like Howard Hill video 1 on you tube.) :thumbsup:
For me personally, target shooting kind of took the fun out of it. It was also hard on my aging joints. Seems like I was icing my elbow every night!
.
Great insights, Guys! Tim, great points. Your body knows when your alignment is right and your release sequence is correct through muscle memory. With proper form, and ChuckC said it right that there are many different shooting styles, we can all improve our shooting.
My archery challenges have been numerous over the years, but one thing that has frustrated me the most is this: I can shoot really well sometimes when the pressure is off, e.g. practicing at the range or at home. When the chips are down, be it a 3-D or a nice buck, that's when I seem to sometimes fail in the shot execution. I rush the shot, don't pick a spot, don't settle prior to the shot... :banghead: That, for me, is where the mental game may help me.
You, Tim, have a gift for making the shot under pressure ever time! I've seen the pictures! I can name a bunch on TG just like you (RC, Bisch, Terry G, Guru & Cade....) Absolute killers! That gift of making pressure shots eludes me though and, I think, is not as common as we might imagine.
I think I found the book you were speaking of, KSdan. Is it Instinctive Archery Insights by Jay Kidwell?
QuoteOriginally posted by Tim:
Hey Dennis....
I spent one entire year changing my shooting style and working on the execution of a shot process. Mimicking some of the great traditional target shooters of today. I made sure every shot that I took a breath, pointed my shoulder and hit my two anchor points. I excelled in my target shooting that summer and would spend hours executing and shooting dots and tight groups. That hunting season I struggled all season. I shot several deer but my shot placement on the deer taken was just ok and I soon lost my confidence. I found myself putting more emphasis on the "shot process" than just shooting the darn deer.
The following year and still today, I've gotten away from the stringent shot process. I'm back to picking a spot, coming into my anchor and waiting to get still. When I'm still the arrow is gone. I spend considerably less time target practicing and more time hunting groundhogs and judo shooting in the yard. When I shoot in my basement up close I practice form, outside I focus only on my target and one arrow. I don't shoot for groups and I don't get too carried away with my accuracy expectations.
I can't help but remember what John Shulz said in his video years ago, "you have to pick whether you're going to be a target shooter or a hunter because the two just don't go together". (The last minute of Hitting them like Howard Hill video 1 on you tube.) :thumbsup:
For me personally, target shooting kind of took the fun out of it. It was also hard on my aging joints. Seems like I was icing my elbow every night!
.
I am the same as Tim. My practice and shots on game are purely instinctive. The only thing I do is try to remind myself to pick a spot when shooting at a large same color target as a deer with no spot to mentally pick. For me a step by step shot process is difficult on a live target. When the target moves the brain is distracted with the process and the process becomes the determination of success or failure.
QuoteOriginally posted by KentuckyTJ:
QuoteOriginally posted by Tim:
Hey Dennis....
I spent one entire year changing my shooting style and working on the execution of a shot process. Mimicking some of the great traditional target shooters of today. I made sure every shot that I took a breath, pointed my shoulder and hit my two anchor points. I excelled in my target shooting that summer and would spend hours executing and shooting dots and tight groups. That hunting season I struggled all season. I shot several deer but my shot placement on the deer taken was just ok and I soon lost my confidence. I found myself putting more emphasis on the "shot process" than just shooting the darn deer.
The following year and still today, I've gotten away from the stringent shot process. I'm back to picking a spot, coming into my anchor and waiting to get still. When I'm still the arrow is gone. I spend considerably less time target practicing and more time hunting groundhogs and judo shooting in the yard. When I shoot in my basement up close I practice form, outside I focus only on my target and one arrow. I don't shoot for groups and I don't get too carried away with my accuracy expectations.
I can't help but remember what John Shulz said in his video years ago, "you have to pick whether you're going to be a target shooter or a hunter because the two just don't go together". (The last minute of Hitting them like Howard Hill video 1 on you tube.) :thumbsup:
For me personally, target shooting kind of took the fun out of it. It was also hard on my aging joints. Seems like I was icing my elbow every night!
.
I am the same as Tim. My practice and shots on game are purely instinctive. The only thing I do is try to remind myself to pick a spot when shooting at a large same color target as a deer with no spot to mentally pick. For me a step by step shot process is difficult on a live target. When the target moves the brain is distracted with the process and the process becomes the determination of success or failure. [/b]
That's interesting, Tom. You don't even think about it, except for picking the spot. You just make the shot. That's exactly it. Your mental state is one of, pick the spot and kill that animal. Then your mental state synchs with your body and you make the shot happen. When the archer's mind is in the right place and proper form is executed, the shot happens with successful outcomes. However, if the archer allows stress and muscle tightness, or negative thoughts to creep into his mind, negative outcomes occur.
I strongly agree that shooting a barebow is very much a mental process. I've headshot grouse and rabbits, executed perfect shots on turkey, deer and pine cones alike, but if anyone watched my shoot paper target rounds, they would keep their distance; its really embarrassing how I can fling arrows that are for score. I believe this lack of accuracy has alot to do with a lack of concentration. A deer would be in pretty good shape if it painted black and white scoring rings over its vitals and made me shoot 60 arrows at it.
QuoteOriginally posted by BWallace10327:
I strongly agree that shooting a barebow is very much a mental process. I've headshot grouse and rabbits, executed perfect shots on turkey, deer and pine cones alike, but if anyone watched my shoot paper target rounds, they would keep their distance; its really embarrassing how I can fling arrows that are for score. I believe this lack of accuracy has alot to do with a lack of concentration. A deer would be in pretty good shape if it painted black and white scoring rings over its vitals and made me shoot 60 arrows at it.
:laughing: What's the saying? Archery is 10% skill and 90% mental?
The only thing I ever remember after the shot on a deer is the spot. I took a nice one last week and I don't even remember anchoring, and I am one to really settle in. A few years back my son had hit a deer a touch back and I had to put a second arrow in her with my son watching. All I remembered after the shot was the arrow striking home tight to the shoulder. I turned and asked him if I settled into my anchor and he commented. Oh yeah Dad, for like three seconds.
We "all" practice so much and so often, just let it happen folks, stop thinking about it in hunting scenarios just shoot the darn deer. :thumbsup:
On the subject of moving deer. I don't shoot at them anymore. I learned my lesson long ago. While I've shot my share walking and a couple trotting, the outcome is not always what we want and that is not acceptable.
I have a great friend and awesome hunter who refuses to shoot a deer that is moving or alert. He only takes broadside shots under 20 yards and no closer than 5 yards. His success rate with his longbow is stellar! I applaud him :clapper:
Tim,
Good on you and good on your buddy. That's discipline!
No question in my mind,shooting a stickbow is mostly mental once the basics have been established. To me that's key, one has to have a well executed shot routine burned into memory in order to excell at this game.
I love to shoot, and often times when I am tired or simply do not have the concentration that I should, I create bad habits.
QuoteOriginally posted by longbow fanatic 1:
QuoteOriginally posted by BWallace10327:
I strongly agree that shooting a barebow is very much a mental process. I've headshot grouse and rabbits, executed perfect shots on turkey, deer and pine cones alike, but if anyone watched my shoot paper target rounds, they would keep their distance; its really embarrassing how I can fling arrows that are for score. I believe this lack of accuracy has alot to do with a lack of concentration. A deer would be in pretty good shape if it painted black and white scoring rings over its vitals and made me shoot 60 arrows at it.
:laughing: What's the saying? Archery is 10% skill and 90% mental? [/b]
Or was that my golf game? LOL!
I could be saying that archery is 10% skill and 90% mental, or I could be saying "come watch me shoot an NFAA 300 round if your having a rough day and need a laugh." :laughing:
Like Tim, I firmly believe the one arrow - retrieve process is the ticket for building confidence. Mental is one thing, confidence is another, though the two can go hand in hand. When I quit shooting "groups", my success increased a bunch.
By shooting one arrow, then retrieving, I find I put more concentration in every aspect into each shot. I never shoot from the same spot, and I always end each session on a good shot, even if it has to be a close one to do so!
There are other benefits to practicing this way that indirectly feed into the "mental" game. I shoot pretty heavy bows, and in practicing this way I tend to shoot a lot less, and I never feel the "need" to shoot a bunch to keep up on practice. I also let my muscles rest between sessions...just like lifting weights. So there is less likely a chance of injury for me...and I never get too tired and/or sloppy.
There are a lot of "other" things folks can do....little things...that help in the confidence/mental capacity during hunting.
Yes Dennis. That's the one. I have friendships with a few pro/collegiate/olympian athletes. . .they all use/train similar techniques to accomplish the task under pressure. Pro golfer, freethrow, field goal kicker, sniper. . all must learn techniques so that they can perform under pressure. Our brains actually function a certain way- you need to understand it.
Few do it naturally and more physical practice is not necessarily the answer.
Dan in KS
I would actually say that archery is 90% physical and 10% mental. The problem is that the 10% mental has a huge impact as we are all human; meaning our minds are finite and not as macho as we want to believe. There are many athletes who have the 90% skill/honed to perfection- but they can not perform when they need to. Those that can master the 10%, both naturally and by training, make it to the PGA.
Very insightful, Mark & Dan! Hey Dan, I think I might purchase that book and give it a go.
When I am shooting to develop form, I want that form to become automatic and that is all I am doing with stat shot. When I am shooting to concentrate on follow through that is all I am doing with that shot. When I am shooting to grove in my aim, that is all I am doing with that shot. I try, I said,'try', to get every little piece and part to become a single dynamic movement and automatic combined unit, until all of the pieces and parts are simply the shot. When I am shooting at a game animal, I am in full automatic with the turbo chargers going full steam. To shoot targets things need to get more methodical and mechanical for repetition purposes, I personally cannot think of a game animal as a target, my brain is in a completely different gear. If the only game shot anyone ever takes is a single shot at a deer from a tree stand, that state of free concentration may not be possible. Squirrels, doves and rabbits are my special training tools and supper quite often.
I think we need to talk about whether there is an aiming process involved in making the shot. If we use one of them then we have to add in the yardage estimation to the game. I don't use one. Those friends of mine that do seem to have less problems with the mental game. Their shooting is more form dependant than mine. If I am unable to "see" my target I can't hit where I want. I find that to be the toughest part of the mental game for me.
MAP
I believe that mental proficiency in archery is based on two things: level of physical awareness of what the body is doing, and the ability to concentrate and eliminate distractions.
Increasing physical awareness is the positive source of our improvement. While some people are born with a high level of physical awareness, and are able to learn physical activities much more quickly than others, anyone can learn to increase his level of physical awareness. Sometimes this is less a matter of learning to increase physical awareness than it is a matter of learning to turn off the cognitive thoughts that are blocking the perfectly good physical awareness we already have.
Concentration is our ability to block negative distractions that impede our accuracy in hand/eye coordination sports. Much of our poor shooting results from allowing distractions to diffuse our attention away from being concentrated on the spot we want to hit. These distractions can be physical, like the antlers of a deer, or mental, like thoughts of other people watching you shoot. Concentration, like awareness, may be a natural inherited talent, but can also be learned.
I don't claim to have all the answers to target panic, but I think one type of target panic is caused by a breakdown of awareness and concentration. When shooting alone, a person may feel connected with his body and able to concentrate on the shot. When shooting under pressure, a person may feel that those connections are broken, and is unable to focus. This is similar to the feeling you might get if you were driving a car and your subtle inputs to the steering wheel started having unpredictable results. "Pressure" is an individual phenomenon; what is perceived as pressure by one person may be just an exhilarating feeling of competition for someone else. It's not logical; why should I feel pressure when shooting in a tournament with my friends when I don't in a high-level business situation that has a lot more riding on it? Nobody performs better under pressure, but, as has been mentioned by others, one can learn to improve performance under pressure. Learning to deal with pressure can reduce the feeling of disconnectedness that results in this particular form of target panic.
I always appreciate your insight, McDave. I agree with your assessment and I plan train my mental focus to improve my archery accuracy in 2016. It's neat to identify areas which need improvement in this journey/passion we all share, then to work diligently to make those improvements. Last year, I dedicated myself to attending Rod Jenkins clinic and spent a great deal of time learning and implementing his system.
Dennis, thanks so much for starting this post. I have read several times over, all that archers more experienced than I, have to say on the mental game. What Tim says in particular resonates with me. My form sequence is pretty good through shot repetition except when my mental focus breaks down usually under pressure or at distances over 25 yards. So recently I have started shooting one arrow at a time and retrieving. Shooting at different distances each time. And stopped using a target. Instead picking a spot and holding until I can relax into the shot. Doing this has helped, and my confidence is returning. After reading what Tim said, I'll try focusing totally on the spot and let my form memory execute. Thanks again for the pointers. Scott
There's nothing more humbling that an indoor 300 round to me.
QuoteOriginally posted by Scott Barr:
Dennis, thanks so much for starting this post. I have read several times over, all that archers more experienced than I, have to say on the mental game. What Tim says in particular resonates with me. My form sequence is pretty good through shot repetition except when my mental focus breaks down usually under pressure or at distances over 25 yards. So recently I have started shooting one arrow at a time and retrieving. Shooting at different distances each time. And stopped using a target. Instead picking a spot and holding until I can relax into the shot. Doing this has helped, and my confidence is returning. After reading what Tim said, I'll try focusing totally on the spot and let my form memory execute. Thanks again for the pointers. Scott
Scott,
I'm always amazed at what I continue to learn from so many Tradgangers. There are so many ways to shoot traditional gear that finding a system that works for you is perfect!
Warmest regards,
Dennis
QuoteOriginally posted by reddogge:
There's nothing more humbling that an indoor 300 round to me.
I started shooting an indoor league about 12 years ago. I was very unhappy with my shooting and decided guys that wanted to be perfect on every shot were the right people to learn from. In the first year I changed a lot in both equipment and form. My shooting improved greatly and my confidence was never higher. I went for a 7 year period where I never missed a deer. And that was here in Maryland where I easily took 5+ deer a year.
Due to my work schedule I quit shooting the indoor league about 3 years ago and my shooting suffered. I started to miss a few deer and some of my kills were what I feel were not what I wanted in a shot. Come January I will be back shooting spots hopefully with a new recurve set up specifically for targets. And yes it will have sights.
When you have to make 60 shots and each one counts you learn to concentrate. It'a a lot better than just slinging arrow in the yard and remembering the good shots and forgetting the bad ones like they didn't happen.
Hey Tim,
Dennis shared the message you PM'd him. I got a lot from it. Very insightful and coming from a guy who has been at this archery craft a lot longer than most of us. Would you mind posting it here for others to read? I personally will be taking to heart your points made. Scott
Hi Scott......I hope you are enjoying your retirement!
I can be long winded....here you go Scott.
I started shooting traditional bows religiously in the mid 80's and have shot my bow at least 5 days a week ever since. I've got it bad! I've shot left handed, right handed, longbows and recurves. I've shot split, three under, gap, point of aim and instinctive. I've totally immersed myself in ever style looking for the holy grail. I've also owned many bows, thinking that would be the answer. I had target panic so bad as a lefty I started shooting right handed. I've had the privilege of introducing several folks into traditional bows over the years, watching some evolve and some bail. Here's what I've found, over and over again.
There is no one style that fits everyone. We are all "wired" differently and some of us process a particular method better than others. Some folks see the arrow in their secondary vision clear as day, while others don't see any part of the shaft no matter how hard they look. My son is an exceptional shot when given "time and room" to process. He has to process every thing in life and his "mind set" allows him to do nothing naturally or instinctive.
I am more of instinctive guy and have always excelled at hand eye coordination activities....golf, baseball, throwing a football etc. I rarely over analyze anything, I just do it. I have practiced gap shooting for months but for the life of me I cannot use the tip to shoot a deer. When I just let things happen I rarely miss. When I start thinking everything goes to hell. How are you wired? Don't force a style that just won't work.
I believe that far too many of us are looking for the perfect system that allows us to achieve accuracy that is not realistic. There are videos of great shooters on the market that show their awesome skills and give us the perception that they never miss! I watched A well known trick shooter warm up one time and he hitched several times. The videos never show that and him like many of us has his own archery demons.
The one thing I've noticed over the years is that most of the better shooters rarely change bows or at least bow styles. They are good because of consistency in both their form and equipment choices. Byron Ferguson uses the exact same form that he used 20 years ago. John Shulz, Barry Wensel, Rick Welch, etc. They have a method they believe in and although they may tweak it now and than the main shot process varies very little as does their choice in equipment.
I personally believe that changing bows does more to damage our shooting as anything. (I plead guilty!) No matter what method of shooting we choose we must allow the bow to become an extension of us. Constantly changing does not allow that to happen. Changing bows, arrows, tabs, gloves, and FORM...is where our issues begin.
I have a friend that has been shooting the same beat up longbow, wood arrows, back quiver and Howard Hill glove for 25 years. At the archery range he shoots pretty good but on animals he is scary accurate, whether it's standing still or moving. A testament to the one bow theory. I don't think I've ever hunted through one season with the same bow. :thumbsup:
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Well put Tim, we sure have learned a ton over the last few years.
I can attest to what Tim said. I have reduced my bows to one brand and style and have been shooting probably the best I have in ten or more years.
I love looking at all the different bows and wonder" what if " all the time. As hard as it is I am sticking to the one bow theory. Kind of branding my mind to make it natural.
Having fun and taking the stressful over thinking out of it makes it a whole lot more enjoyable.
Happy Holidays,
Big Ed
There are many wise words in this thread. Most of them spring from the many years of practice and hunting put in by those who posted them. I hope many read and benefit from them.
However each of us has to walk down this path and learn our own lessons. Reading may provide insight, but we learn the most from actually doing.
Much well said here. But do we know WHY some of this works?
Read Kidwell if you have not. He has had 100% success on helping Olympians cure performance/target panic. It is not some pyscho-babble stuff but "Sports psychology."
What I find so bizarre is many in the hunting/archery world have all sorts of advice of home remedies (some of it actually can help- much of NOT) yet I think most do NOT really understand WHY and HOW it helped. YET- we have available to us an entirely new world of understanding as to how the brain actually works for these issues (And it is NOT pyscho-thearpy mumbo jumbo!).
As example, one thing mentioned here in this thread: CONSISTENCY. (BTW-25 years same ONE bow here for me.) BUT do you know WHY this works? It is NOT just the physical memory/ familiarity. Consistency actually builds TRUST in your method and gear. That TRUST directly relates to your actual ability to perform under pressure. I TRUST, and therefore no longer need to think about my shot, sequence etc. I only need to concentrate on ONE key thing.
Now WHY is concentrating on ONE thing important?
ANSWER: Try this right now: Actually close your eyes and concentrate real hard on say, an orange. Think about it. The shape, dimples, the stem, the color, even the odor. Concentrate! NOW: stop thinking about it!. . . . Stop thinking about the orange. . .
You CAN NOT! It is impossible to stop. . UNLESS- . . Close your eyes and start thinking about an apple. The shape, red shades, stem, color, the odor, the taste. .. Concentrate on an apple. . .
Now notice- you will forget about the orange! Works every time.
The KNOWN FACT about the brain (Sports Psychology Study): You can only fully concentrate on ONE THING at a time.
Translate that to hunting with a bow (and even much that is written on archery threads!). As the deer approaches and the moment of crisis comes we are told to: watch the animal, look for body language, watch the twig, wait for the right angle, bend at waist, pick a spot, steady bow arm, draw, aim, yada yada yada. . . not to mention it is the biggest buck of my life, never seen one like this, it is "him," etc etc.
It factually becomes IMPOSSIBLE for you to concentrate/focus on the needed task when your are trying to process all of that info. at the same time. GUYS- it is IMPOSSIBLE for 99% of humans to think about all those tips while trying to concentrate on an arrow to a spot!
I obviously write this as I have observed the results in other high level athletes, and benefited myself when I regularly apply it. I know an Olympian, a world champion, who almost left his sport due to the panic/performance failure- UNTIL he understood and mastered the mental/brain training. Now he applies it to shooting pool, golf, you name it. It is not that he is tougher than the rest of us- or some new age self-pycho baloney. HE UNDERSTANDS how his brain works.
I have taken a few dozen men hunting over the past decade or so. I sat in the same tree as many of them. Using compounds and even a crossbow, I have watched men miss at least 10 PY deer in my presence, while only seeing 2 deer taken. Think about it- How can a guy miss a MOOSE or ELK at 10 yds with a compound? It is actually quite explainable. They may have perfect/textbook physical form, but they have NOT developed a year round mental/brain training into their regular practice. When the moment comes, their brain resorts to its normal function under pressure- doing the very things it was created to do. And the wheels come off! Been there done that!!!!
AGAIN- this is FAR less a physical issue, a method issue, a form issue, etc etc. Good grief- many top PGA guys are known for their UNORTHODOX form. This is understanding how our brains actually work and building this into our year round training and enjoyment of the bow.
I am not a master by any means. But as you can tell by reading, I am convinced that much of our answer lays in this field now minimally addressed in 95% of the archery advice and literature.
Merry CHRISTmas. Good hunting. Have a great NEW YEAR. Read Kidwell and build some type of this training into your New year.
Dan in KS
For me, I practice a lot, so that when I hunt, it is automatic. When I am at the shop practicing, I can pick apart just about every aspect of every shot I make. Sometimes, the arrow goes right close to where I want, but I am P/O'ed at myself because I know I did something wrong in the execution.
When I hunt, I am so focused on the animal, I can rarely ever tell you anything about the mechanics of the shot after I have let the arrow loose.
I get nervous just like anyone when I see a critter I think I will shoot. It is a little worse on really big critters, or when it has been a long dry spell between shooting critters. But, something happens when I make the decision that it is time to shoot. I no longer feel any nerves as I draw and shoot. I know that I am still nervous, that my heart rate and breathing are elevated, but I feel as calm as a cucumber.
As soon as I see my arrow disappear in the critter is when the shakes really hit me!
Also, I do NOT always make a perfect shot! Sometimes I make a bad shot and it is my fault, sometimes the critter reacts and turns my perfect shot into a not-so-perfect shot. I absolutely hate it when a critter is lost, and I do lose one from time to time. Nothing burns me up worse than for that to happen.
I hope you get a system that works well for you figured out.
Bisch
P.S. - I typed out my post before going back and reading everyone elses posts. If I would have read them first, I could have just quoted Tim's post above (4 above this one), and not had to type anything! This paragraph by Tim, really sums up how I look at it:
QuoteI am more of instinctive guy and have always excelled at hand eye coordination activities....golf, baseball, throwing a football etc. I rarely over analyze anything, I just do it. I have practiced gap shooting for months but for the life of me I cannot use the tip to shoot a deer. When I just let things happen I rarely miss. When I start thinking everything goes to hell. How are you wired? Don't force a style that just won't work.
I ordered the book, knowledge is priceless. I took Mr. Jenkin's class and have vastly improved my form, now looking to take it to the next level. Lots of good info in previous posts. What stands out to me is you have to find what works for YOU, no cookie cutter die fits everyone. so the journey continues.
For me it was one thing to pound paper and foam, I did well at them.
But put a live animal out there I would " Tony Romo" it!
Was not until I ditched the foam and paper and shot one arrow roving and stumping did the light bulb come one for me.
I was then able to make clean shots and harvest deer and actually rember anchoring and the shot.
I can now shot foam and paper better than before, but my bread and butter practice is in the woods roving.
I think if you don't train ur brain to pic the spot it won't.
With paper the spot was already there, but did not take the focus it took to find my own spot, that's my believe.
I was a basket case, so if I can get it, there is hope for all.
This is a good subject, an archer can practice all day long, make incredible shots in the back yard in preparation for a shoot. Either 3D or paper it doesn't matter. You can invest a ton of money in your equipment, you can tune that equipment til the cows come home! But the most overlooked and misunderstood part of the game is mental.
Something strange happens when we take our "A" game public for others to see. Everything an archer has practiced a thousand times and has made the same shot another 1000 times goes out the window. As humans we want to do our best at these shoots, we want to score well. But sometimes it ends in disaster at these events.
Why? we focus so much on our form and execution but rarely focus on fixing the mental side of our games. It's this exposure in public that will often times cripple an otherwise excellent shot.
We are often times not mentally prepared to perform well. All the confidence in the world won't matter if you have not "exposed" and "conditioned" your mental game. The only way to do that is attending more public events. We put a lot of pressure on ourselves to perform well in anticipation of an event. We have expectations that are unreasonable sometimes.
Most of the ailments start when we focus only on the score, rather than the process of shooting itself. Often times we think of how well we will score before we shoot the first target. Which will undermine all the practice you've ever done. Our fear of missing in public can cripple us, and remove our ability to run a proper shot sequence. Once this happens our brains turn into what I'd call a survival mode, or panic mode.
We may no longer be able to run our shots like we did at home. The shot will often be more rushed than it normally is. Why does this happen? When we shoot we all have a "sight" picture of what looks right. When that is met the arrow is gone...even before we want it to be. We have not established to our minds that what we are seeing in a public setting is ok. So it turns into an out of control shot.
The only way to fix this is to condition yourself by shooting all you can in the public eye. We have to train our brains that its ok to fail or miss in public. I shoot a lot of high profile tournaments and this is [art of my story, I hope this may help someone.
this is great, thanks for sharing!